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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 13, 1932)
TTTE FiTTOTCNT! K "R 0 T R TWR -f! TJ A RT uJPEE KINDS F LOVE rHAPTEB XXV Linr-FKASCKS' protestatous to fl r ,t mi!it be token, by tlm un It harl m , ,h. canabi ities riCeHed- Th most thrilling """iih th most beautiful J.:: -Amo to an end after rains. The curtain " People so home. The most . no-el with the most chnrm ."Irit I nS beronie, can b read Vfi1 ,d another one can be be Ulred. -rnivod for a girls' X,rnned by Ermintrune s fciP. Mull hud r T ."IE1 intrude, and 'r' r.u,u nd stoDned on !nr. 1 hnm at thirst statfons for It .takes and hot dogs. But when I, creative artist has labored L on a masterpiece she, Hesitates t,'b,te like fury to turn It into i.qr. I know," Ban rejuureu. i 'kind of been thinking see? mat, m first idea was to beat it. nairt up ulM . ,. .-,1 thow don't Bonk you so A for meals around here. I could rg a tew ieiur " yt . returns, and maybe 1 could iometliiuB in the meantime with h damn pardon me enucatiomu tk, o " as Mary-Frances at Lt'ed'an interruption "wait, hon, ,. i,1. n make so much dif- lfnce ono way or the other right ., I was thinking that It 1 J around awmie mnyuc youu ibi-i ifercnt abnut tnnt ciassy mnj i.nio net nf ours. Sure. I Sir," to prevent another attempted lerruption. me itim u"h - hit vou so muen. nm. .nisi uie ; T know it would go. and go see? Bis! Course, if you hnd a InT home life here or anything ut you ami. M-t.- im ti-n up so crazy amine me nno an. you mean a lot to me, too And I'm giving that to you N KAY CLEAVER STRAHAN were by toward tennis.nd.winv Mr. nnu inight see?"(snd so on. It made excellent material to pre t to Ermintrude the following He says he knows he Isn't worthy touch the potnway wnere my have trod. His professional h,pr notlung nmounrs to any- ng to mm in comparison to our for one another. He simply n't leave me. Ermintrude. I bc- ii-m him to. but I mean ton much him. he says. Pie says I'm 'woman chlH in one.' If I'll go with . lip'll go anywnere. anywnere. if I refuse, he'll stay right here my side, and give up his profes- mal career, and take any miser- lowlv work he can find rather n leave me. If I'll go with him 'Go with him! Mary-Frances Fen k. honest, lately I think you are t roine nirkoo or something. Go :k him! TTpll. I guess your grand- and grandpa and your sisters :it have just a little something to 1 about you going with him." 'Wpll. who said I was going with li? I must sny, Ermintrude " 'Well, you tnlk about it all the All the time." I do not. Last Wednesday I lust f piy told you that he was beseech- me to. And yesterday and to I Just barely mentioned It again, course, if you don't want me to you anything at all, anymore, I won't. Of course " I don't care if tou tell me." said Mntrude. "Only I do kind of pis you've got this Earl awfully the brain. If I talked about Iter every living minute of the day f nignt, you'd get sick of it, too, oer. i guess maybe I love Peter much as you love your old Earl, I certainly haven't got him on brain." "Peter!" said the outraged Mary- Snces. "Why, Ermintrude Hill! you still thinkinor nhout Peter rrison? Just because he asked to his birthday party -the first and Wrote A nnto o von thp t day. and ffets rA when he I'ts you on the street? That's Vmst. That's entirely different. t .mst childish that's all thnt Childish. Yon ilnn'P lrnnw tlA ft, thing about real, true, deep, onate love such as ours." ftirtlingly Ermintrude replied, 1 tlon t know as you know so ' about love, either," and pointed chin out provoeatively, t was Snturdar f ' walking to the store to do some Ferag for Ermintrude s mother. jr-trsnoes stonned. stood . still. Ml. if I M -v. j j.j po does?" Older reonle. T hip.. " M P!P. F'rudp, and tried to musk iennn. :", ilasrant, with , insouciance, uldpr pnoplcl" Mary-Frances, flung it from her. '-ome on. We got to hurry, said. Mother said," contin-t-rmintnule, as if by chance, and '"eimi? to h ti.. a.,i.in... ' ''bPr. ntlVWnv. "thnt i.nn0A nan. didn't. Last night Sirs. Mattoson tO ro nvn .nn.n Um . r .... i u lv Bcc ""ter-.n-law to borrow a couple 'overs for her bridge tables this '"""n, so we took her over in " her srandchildren, the twins, " said modern girls didn't re I ", right, or something. ""'i t remember just what she ' w" riding in front with i and not supposed to be listen- -n'.l morher sniit tnmothintf J'rs. M.itteson said they didn't "'"nil a'oin real love, and ;,'."" M guessed they iu n-l'h as t ,e zirla nf hr t.rio,l f, 'ven Mrs. Mnttason's period , !; Mattason said why. m ju moilier mean? And mother l" , " niiirried 111 ' ni Hi. !h' Has hiM-ominff more and nvineeri that neonle hA In ars. at least, or two. and maybe (she was thinking i'tle brother, Panny, I tney even began to D11,. . t 1.. "I'.'r-tand It er know, the V'-' Mary-Frnnees slmplv 'iii. swbt with fpnthcrV a lifted shoulder and "ti no. "(if .,,,.- , t moth.r knows more about m m"' l:'H ,ik,, I-aurenoe ' :',r Browning, and Ells "ui-ox ji,,,! evervbod. i coil m omumiman so o) In the world worth taking advice from besides poets. And if you could hear what my daddy says about my mother, 1 guess, maybe, you might think she was one of them." "Who said I never took advice from anybody but poets?" Mary Frances demanded. "I think your mother Is an awfully nice lady. Er mintrude. But I guess she wasn't the toast of the south when she was a girl. Now, my grandmother " "I know. Tou told me. My mo ther didn't live In the south." "Well, Rosalie did. In South Carolina, And I asked her just the other day how people knew for sure when they were in love, and all I have to aay is thnt what she told me, and she talked for pretty near half an hour on the subject, cer tainly didn't sound much like what your mother had to say about being married 10 years and babies and all. And if age Is all you go by, why, I guess Rosalie Is maybe t little older than your mother." Ermintrude. not barren of tact, remarked, "Miss Alderman was mad as hops when you cut basketball the other day." "I didn't feel like rowdying around," Mary-Frances replied, and sighed spectacularly. "I had some poetry to copy." "You'll be sorry, though, If she flunks you in gym." "I don't know," said Mary-Frances, deliberately dreamy, and, one fears, deliberately vexatious, "I might be far away married, or living my own life by having a career with Earl, or anything, by thnt time." Small dining tables were set out on a tiled terrace, and there were a pool and a fountain and a smooth green lawn, and awny in the dis tance Mount Hood gleamed warm pink against a blue sky. Ann brought her eyes oack from the mountain to look at Phil, across the table from her. He was hand some and wise and strong nnd smil ing, and he loved her. She smiled, too, and said. "Phil, dear, I adore this place. However did you find it, away out here?" "A friend of mine told me abut it. There's dancing, later, inside, if we care to stay." "Let's! But can wet It has been so long since we have danced. How long?" "Too long. We do get Into ruts. Sort of forget about good times to be had. don't wo?" "Perhaps. But during the winter there isn't much to do. We don't care for public dances." t "No. But we could go places and dine, as we're doing this evening, and dance, if " "If what?" sho asked, but she continued smiling, because she did not know what Phil had begun to say, "If you had the proper things to wear to the better places, or weren't always getting dinner at home, or too tired." "If we'd plnn," he said. "We will, ntter this. Well have good times tnis summer, and well keep them up next winter. What about it, you beautiful?" (To Be Continued) TELEVISION NEXT NEW TQRK OP) Radio greets the new year with high hopes for greater progress in the development of television. Still looking upon sight as consid erably experimental, the industry be lieves, however, that sufficient pro gress has been made to warrant a favorable outlook. Broadcasting continued to show a tendency to maintain leadership in .U. .nJ.n 1.11- .1.. J f me iuuiii uciii, nuiitr mc uinmi.fu:- turing industry reflected general business conditions through a smaller nmount of sales. Bond P. Geddes, executive vice president of the Radio Manufacturers' association, estimated that the total business would be approximately Jf.'ao.uoiP.oiiu, compared witn twice thnt much in 1030. An increase in the number of countries from which radio programs were broadrast came during the year, including the addition of Jnpnn and Siam to the list. Particularly out standing was the opening of station HVJ, Vatican City, in wmrn iJope Pius mode bis first world-wide radio talk. In the laboratories television re search went on apace, including ex periments on high frequencies with the idea in mind that the ultra-short waves will be the practical place to put picture transmission. In that connection also was 'the work on cathode ray tubes, electrical scanning devices, performed by Dr Vlndimar Zworykin at Camden, X. J., and Philo T. Farnsworth at Phila delphia. Engineers hoped to be able to prove 'the value of this picture research with the start of work on the installation of a high frequency transmitter by the National Broadcasting company on top of the Empire State building, New York. Otherwise sonnd and sight experi ments went forward with the addition of two such stations In New York to those already operating In Chicngo nnd several other centers. Picture station W'.'Xt R began transmitting In conjunction with WOHS. while W2XAK of the Colum bia Broadcasting system was started with the sound being handled by the short wave station W'.'XE. LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE Curiosity By HAROLD GRAY The Best of the Nation'i 'Human-est" and Funniest Comics On This Page Daily tnONT COME. NOU DON'T KNOW whkt rr WAS HOVJ . ( WtU., H'S Vnopc - NOT I C i n - - n Tc ivt k iii ill i FtGseweo it f 1 j r i -s 'Tr" i onDkiT n r "w iiwiio - 1 i 11 I Ho I MS -fKJ I .IT v ""ww i i i r Swunl i fcutss 've sot C"V S'Pecr TO know OUST HOPe H VOtKT WrxME TO STtVS OUT LKTE HKE THKT MMM - ITS MTHOUT HlSA fiNO I VMORRM BOUT HIA NWcN VON T KtHOVO iNMHErXfc HE VS - CUR.OSTS FOR. iOU- EV)E.M H-TTV.E USiNVc, )104,T Be. KTVSEt TU SHE KHOVS MV4ERE. nt WCVB- HM-M-M- fXT THPvX VMHtSc VMPy He ? HE HEVE. GOES OUT MK6 THKT- OH. WEU.- WS OU ENOUGH TO HOVO WS VOtCi i.ROJH- F He WANTS TO EtCT OUT MOVXJ fc.Kkt THE nHfvrs HVS MTA.-OT XIM TYLER'S FLYING LUCK By LYMAN YOUNG CAViiuN C BResi4 nsww EtT KMnvJ1 nJ 3CX-DATAN -' HAPPEHEO BSWW HAEDW . lfl- vSN I t.B TrTrtSf 4 1 f W9T I SAW A BIS BUNCH , M PRONTO ' MS 6EHTO.y TOUHD KNOW &pABKUNa ( A, rZ "TmC? I OF BOLDISBS ! COUNT HARLlN's, X VbU EXWAUST6D WUERe ) ,w-t51Tki X 1 PRINCESS! THECAMPED FOR. L?X cOfn NEAR MIS 1AM JTl V J I THE NlflUT A FEWMlLtS y-? T 501 1 POST THIS EVEN v-. W FTZOW WERE. BUT TUEVRB ) y& ( AN-To4? PV BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES A Tough Boy! By MARTIN r ( wc l ! h ( IIP i pn ' '' a , HBl tv NtAWWB BRINGING UP FATHER By GEORGE McMANUS OF COOR'bE THATT PHOME bTARX iM TO Eat TKlb CORMEO BEEF .MS' CA6BE DiMTV EMT OP TO ME 1 J o THIS i THE P" wib time Vhile OOT feHOPPiMCi? V . OUT OUR WAY lll'll li : Ilii'llllll'l I III W t y I III I'L'ilil v.'4 VJEUU' 1 W IMPOSSIBLE'. t Mill" on: -tsspi ONie Dlw pi i j ' 3 ' 'T 3 ft IS1. Intl rwlure Strrlet, 1st. J jtT. By WILLIAMS .." n" off in tnlking to you f t," contended -!, i" evervthingi I.ellis Ilrswn. T'fv i ' .' ' " eucsno it they - 5 ..ist Krite different wsys, 4 i " P different people Eastern Star at Yoncalla Installs TOXCAM-A. Jn. IS. ffiij-ll) ; Pslestine Clmi'ter, Order of hast-, ern Stnr. Instelled officers for the eoming venr Tuesdny evening in the i I (I. O. K. hull- Following the instal- Intln'n the members were Invited to the Stonaker home where Mr. nnd Mrs. Slonsker entertnined with s ; delightful luneheon. The stalled are worthy matron Mrs. lie I Wise: worthy patron. II. T. W estfall . , assoriate worthy matron. Roth M-. I assoeinte worthy patron. J. .1. Hnrr. ; seoretnry.,(iertrude Mausherty: tress urer 11. L. tifmakeri eondiirtress. Irene (iuard: associate """'".r."": K.dith Sprinkle; chatdain, Mary I lass, marshal. Fred Solle; ""n''' " othv Ilrown: Adah. Ilnh rainier. ltuth. Mrs. Hnrr: f-stnei '."" i.lEAt! Martha, Nettie llntion: r.lec - t, Kulslin Westfall; warder, Mr. HONORED NEIGHBOR When the Minnesota basketball !,,, ,,, P' don't know; team appear-d in the nedicaiorT nave to nei;eve, In the pew .vrt i'skoii onm k. like If wn io i,. ovn,n.-i!iini. it merki'd t!ie fir"' ';,?"' Hesides thai, litime in vears that a tioplier finiiilet tic a few people lopened Uis season wajt from home. r Tr-r uJiNM t Nou oo wour seat ? I DUST. HI5 Yjf I VMHATa THAT PRiNaPAivr trousers Gooo,y numbep ? fu- stop sSHa. ' DAnAJ I'LL J-ie BPUTAUTV IM ASV?-T .ara o t t. err Born Thirttw weaps too soon Cr.R.WiLLiAMC 1-lt g IMI sir U SWVICt. mt-J OUR BOARDING HOUSE By AHERN AXlSk'.Cr(EST'R, WAS ArC m -THe stR-r bv MoT AsserrriMo . VOURSELF AS MASrfBR CF TVlE House - uirp ar -rue MrttUCR, AS I AM J TlRM, BUT QZ.H-TLB "THe iroaJ riAsip ifi THE VELVCT GLOfJZ ---TriA-T IS MV MAMnjER ' MA1DRALLS, -THe . VllFS WILL MAVi M0T teSPECT ' I SEE VOU EVE.R -TURfU -tH S-ToP-Sksal and "THAT AMAflei OF VOURS ' I WAS1 , -THERE OkJE MlOKT umea sHe vjas vOrll-T-TLiAi' Vdd DOVJaJ -Tb A PES AiVV VOU PlPliV EVEkl CLICkf A -TflCTH 0T2 fHE''P Uo-3ice ! WHeRE WA5 jl t-TH' IRO HAeiTJ IM "IM' VEUvBT GLOE t THAT UiOHT 5HE TbR A CRASH LAkiDIAlG OFF TM- frc-t STEPS V I-,. LnJS-MAfd 1 0 112 bv nca umnct, mc. n l H PT. SIT , j